麻豆传媒

Ge Bai, PhD, CPA is a professor of practice in Accounting at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School and professor of Health Policy & Management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is an expert on health care pricing, policy, and management. Dr. Bai has testified before House Ways and Means Committee, written for the Wall Street Journal, and published her studies in leading academic journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, JAMA Internal Medicine, Annals of Internal Medicine, and Health Affairs. Her work has been widely featured in ABC, Atlantic, CBS, CNN, Forbes, Fox 麻豆传媒, Los Angeles Times, NBC, New York Times, NPR, The Guardian, U.S. 麻豆传媒 & World Report, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and other media and used in government regulations and congressional testimonies.  


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Emergency Medicine and Anesthesiology Specialties See Abnormally High Increases in Price

Emergency Medicine and Anesthesiology are two outlier medical specialties that had abnormally high increases in charges from 2010 to 2019, according to a new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine by researchers at Johns Hopkins University and University of Toronto.
15-Mar-2022 01:30:14 PM EDT

Study Suggests Misalignment Between Tax Subsidies for Nonprofit Hospitals and the Community Benefit These Hospitals Provide

A study led by researchers at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School found a surprising misalignment between the tax subsidies received by nonprofit hospitals in the United States and the community benefit that these hospitals provide.
11-Feb-2022 01:00:10 PM EST

New Prediction Model Shows Increased Financial Distress of For-Profit Hospitals

A Johns Hopkins Carey Business School analysis of nationwide data from all U.S. hospitals estimated that the average probability of hospital financial distress in 2020 increased to 28.5 percent, only about a half percentage point higher than in the previous year. But more significantly, the estimated financial distress of for-profit hospitals increased to 39.1 percent during the tumultuous year of the coronavirus outbreak 鈥 about seven percentage points higher than in 2019.
13-Dec-2021 07:00:38 AM EST

Hospital Prices for Radiology Services 2 to 6 Times Higher Than Medicare Rates, New Study Shows

The median commercial negotiated prices for 13 common shoppable hospital radiology services were about 2 to 6 times higher than the rates set by Medicare, according to a new study in Radiology by researchers at Johns Hopkins University and Michigan State University.
29-Nov-2021 09:25:43 AM EST

Government, Nonprofit Hospitals鈥 Charity Care Falls Short of Their Favorable Tax Treatment

The amount of charity care provided by government and nonprofit hospitals falls short of the obligation implied by their favorable tax treatment, according to a new study in the April issue of Health Affairs by researchers at Johns Hopkins University鈥檚 Carey Business School and Bloomberg School of Public Health.
06-Apr-2021 10:55:54 AM EDT

Many hospitals still see the chargemaster price as an important way to enhance revenue,鈥 said Ge Bai, an expert on health care finance and accounting at Johns Hopkins University. 鈥淗aving a high list price means they have more leverage in negotiating prices for people covered by private insurance.鈥

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The $322 million 鈥渕erely indicates the amount they would have charged arbitrarily鈥 before negotiated insurer discounts, said Ge Bai, an accounting and health policy professor at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School. Insurers would have paid UVA only $88 million for that care, according to an accounting of unpaid bills presented last year to the UVA Health board. Even that unpaid figure didn鈥檛 come out of UVA鈥檚 purse since federal and state governments provided 鈥渇unding earmarked to cover indigent care鈥 for almost all of it 鈥 $83.7 million, according to Bai. The real, 鈥渦nfunded鈥 cost of UVA鈥檚 indigent care: $4.3 million, or 1.3 percent of what it claims, according to the document. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 nothing,鈥 given how much money UVA makes, Bai said. 鈥淣onprofit hospitals advance their charitable mission primarily through providing indigent care.鈥

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Johns Hopkins Carey Business School professor Ge Bai is a health policy expert and helped write the proposed Senate bill. 鈥淕ood luck 鈥 you鈥檙e likely to pay a very high price for this trip,鈥 Bai said, adding, 鈥淚 think this air ambulance issue is the poster child of surprise medical billing.鈥 Bai said patients often have no choice when it comes to using an air ambulance 鈥 and since many insurance companies don鈥檛 pay 鈥 patients can get stuck with huge bills. 鈥淭hese are perfect ingredients to make the patients the most delicious prey,鈥 she said.

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